0

Does anyone know of a free website or program which will take a string and render it quoted with the appropriate escape characters?

Let's say, for instance, that I want to quote

It's often said that "devs don't know how to quote nested "quoted strings"".

And I would like to specify whether that gets enclosed in single or double quotes. I don't personally care for any escape character other than backslash, but other's might.

3
  • 2
    Any editor can do a search/replace, is that not enough?
    – Sjoerd
    Jun 29, 2010 at 7:14
  • 3
    Appropriate for what? The exact escaping convention that must be used depends on the language... Shell script? Perl? Php? Python? Tcl?
    – psmears
    Jun 29, 2010 at 7:16
  • 1
    Can you explain your requirements better? You probably want to escape other characters... what if your string contains a backslash, newlines, or others? How will you use the string?
    – Kobi
    Jun 29, 2010 at 7:57

4 Answers 4

2

If none of the double quotes of the string is already escaped, you can simply do:

str = str.replace(/"/g, "\\\"");

Otherwise, you should check if it is already escaped and replace only if it isn't; You can use lookbehind for that. The following is what came to my mind first but it would fail for strings like escaped backslash followed by quotes \\" :(

str = str.replace(/(?<!\\)"/g, "\\\"");

The following makes sure that the second last character, if exists, is not a backslash.

str = str.replace(/(?<!(^|[^\\])\\)"/g, "\\\"");

Update: Just remembered that JavaScript doesn't support look-behind; you can use the same regex on a look-behind supporting regex engine like perl/php/.net etc.

2

Any decent regex library in any decent programming language will have a function to do this - not that it's hard to write one yourself (as the other answers have indicated). So having a separate website or program to do it would be mostly useless.

  • Perl has the quotemeta function
  • PCRE's C++ wrapper has a function RE::QuoteMeta (warning: giant file at that link) which does the same thing
  • PHP has preg_quote if you're using Perl-compatible regexes
  • Python's re module has an escape function
  • In Java, the java.util.regex.Pattern class has a quote method
  • Perl and most of the other regular expression engines based on Perl have metacharacters \Q...\E, meaning that whatever comes between \Q and \E is interpreted literally
  • Most tools that use POSIX regular expressions (e.g. grep) have an option that makes them interpret their input as a literal string (e.g. grep -F)
2
  • 1
    These are all good suggestions, but it still depends on what the output will be used for: these will work for regular expressions, and sometimes for double-quoted strings, but generally not for single-quoted strings, for example...
    – psmears
    Jun 29, 2010 at 16:38
  • 1
    Hmm, I think I misread the question as just asking about regular expressions.
    – David Z
    Jun 29, 2010 at 17:58
1

In Python, for enclosing in single quotes:

import re
mystr = """It's often said that "devs don't know how to quote nested "quoted strings""."""
print("""'%s'""" % re.sub("'", r"\'", mystr))

Output:

'It\'s often said that "devs don\'t know how to quote nested "quoted strings"".'

You could easily adapt this into a more general form, and/or wrap it in a script for command-line invocation.

-1

so, I guess the answer is "no". Sorry, guys, but I didn't learn anything that I don't know. Probably my fault for not phrasing the question correctly.

+1 for everyone who posted

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.